Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:
TML fan said:
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:
TML fan said:
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:
bustaheims said:
Zee said:
What's the exact thing they did with Gomez? They told him he can't play? I don't understand, what if he wants to play? Doesn't he have a grievance he can file, he's under contract, has a no-movement clause or something, how can they tell him "sorry you can't play"?
They've basically made him a healthy scratch for the entire season, which, as long as they still pay him and give him access to the team's facilities, is all they need to do to honour his contract.
I dunno.... What they've done is enjoined him from following his profession, and preemptively, without giving him the same chance as every other similar employee in the organization. I think there's a grievance or a lawsuit here.
Unless his contract stipulates he has to play, Montreal can do whatever they want with him, as long as he gets his money.
Or they can dream up this accelerated buyout thing on the quick to avoid very messy lawsuits. I think Gomez and Redden could definitely have sued, and won.
How do you figure? Just what have they done that violates any laws or any stipulations in their contract? This is a personnel decision. By your logic, anyone who's ever been a healthy scratch has been denied every opportunity to showcase themselves for a contract and thus has a grievance with the league.
Gomez's contract says he can't play hockey anywhere but for the Montreal Canadiens or their affiliates. It is up to them to decide who plays and who doesn't. As long as he gets paid, he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
The damages are those that he suffers by not being treated equally with other employees. Of course a team can decide who suits up and who doesn't, but this is not the same as a healthy scratch. It's more like a lockout of a single individual. In fact, it IS a lockout. They are denying him the opportunity to pursue his profession in an arbitrary and capricious way that is completely different from how they are treating their other employees.
By sending him home with no chance whatsoever to participate on the team or its affiliates, they have essentially kicked these guys off the team without the employee having a chance to become a free agent -- and that is essentially a unliteral abrogation of the contract. It's bad faith dealing, and you'd better believe their agents could have made a lawsuit out of it.
Let's see ... the NHLPA "reaches out" to the league with concerns over Gomez and Redden and bingo, out of nowhere, here comes an "accelerated" compliance buyout. Why do you think the NHL agreed to that, posthaste? Because they are selfless, altruistic, noble guardians of the good and right? Or because their lawyers told them, "Get this fixed or else"?
This still doesn't explain what law or which part of his contract has been violated.
Montreal is under no obligation to give Gomez anything other than what is owed to him.
I don't see how anything Montreal has done is in bad faith. Gomez got every penny from Montreal that his contract says hes worth, and he did very little for them. I'm sure when that contract was signed there was a reasonable expectation that Gomez would perform to a certain level, which he hasn't. Now Montreal wants to rid themselves of a problem contract. They can't trade him. All they can do is buy him out, and if he gets hurt they can't even do that.
So Montreal has this giant boat anchor weighing down their team, and you think THEY are the ones who are being unfair?
If Gomez wants to play he can ask to be released from his contract and forfeit his remaining earnings. Otherwise, if I'm Montreal, I'm going to do what is best for my team.
Honestly, if the players have this same attitude, I can't say I blame the league for locking them out twice.